The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) released its draft National Spectrum Roadmap for 2025–2030 on Friday, December 26, 2025, outlining a strategic shift toward satellite-integrated mobile services. The five-year plan prioritizes the commercialization of Direct-to-Device (D2D) technology and Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTN) to eliminate “signal blackspots” in the country’s rural and riverine regions.

The roadmap, made public through a regulatory notice and a concurrent industry briefing, represents the first formal integration of D2D protocols into Nigeria’s national infrastructure baseline. By pivoting toward satellite-powered mobile connectivity, the NCC aims to achieve universal broadband coverage by 2030 through a hybrid model that fuses Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) and Geostationary (GEO) satellite capabilities with existing terrestrial grids.
Strategic Integration of Satellite and Terrestrial Networks
The 2025–2030 roadmap provides the regulatory framework for Supplemental Coverage from Space (SCS), allowing standard smartphones to connect directly to satellite constellations without specialized hardware. This policy shift follows the December 16, 2025, announcement of a major expansion by Airtel Africa and Starlink to deploy satellite-to-cellular services across the continent, including Nigeria.
Under the guidance of NCC Executive Vice Chairman and CEO Dr. Aminu Maida, the commission is moving to authorize spectrum-sharing agreements between Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) and satellite providers. The roadmap identifies D2D as a critical resiliency measure against terrestrial infrastructure vulnerabilities, such as fiber-optic cuts and power outages, which frequently disrupt service in West Africa.
Technical Parameters and Service Verticals
The NCC’s technical strategy for the 2025–2030 period includes:
- Multi-Orbit Synergy: Utilizing LEO constellations for low-latency broadband and GEO satellites for wide-area broadcast and backhaul.
- Spectrum Allocation: Re-evaluating the use of the 60 GHz band for multi-gigabit wireless systems and optimizing C-band holdings to balance 5G capacity with satellite service requirements.
- IoT and Agriculture: Targeting “dead zones” to enable smart agriculture, disaster response, and remote Internet of Things (IoT) monitoring.
This regulatory evolution follows previous efforts to modernize Nigeria’s orbital assets. In December 2025, the Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy confirmed plans to replace the aging NigComSat-1R—active since 2011—with two next-generation High-Throughput Satellites (HTS). These new spacecraft are expected to carry 77 transponders across multiple frequency bands to support the increased data demands of a D2D-enabled ecosystem.
Regulatory Rationale
The commission stated that the roadmap is essential to accommodate the rapid transition from legacy 3G networks to 5G and future 6G standards. By removing the requirement for terrestrial-only towers in geographically challenging areas, the NCC intends to reduce the capital expenditure burden on domestic telcos while expanding the national subscriber base.
“The draft roadmap provides the green light for partnerships that were previously hindered by rigid licensing boundaries,” the document noted. “By formally recognizing D2D and NTN as integral components of the national network, we are ensuring that connectivity is determined by geography, not just population density.”
Timeline to 2030
The NCC has scheduled a public inquiry and stakeholder roundtable for early 2026 to finalize the implementation guidelines for the 2025–2030 roadmap. Immediate milestones include the launch of a public network map to track service transparency and the commencement of formal spectrum-leasing applications for D2D providers. The commission expects the first commercial D2D pilot programs under this new framework to begin by mid-2026, aligning with the scheduled deployment of advanced LEO shells by global operators.
